Follow the Fader

A Trip Through Indie Rock Fashion Circa '95

Sometimes in our RSS-haze we forget that "indie rock" wasn't always so fashionable. In fact, if you go back to early nineties, the style was a lack of style, and not in some "I'm going to wear this because no one would think that I would actually wear this" sort of way. (Look at you Mom jeans.) Rather, it was earnest, as if all indie rockers of the '90s merely woke up, saw their jeans and put them on. It was honest. It was real. Often, it was pretty ugly. While the slacker style has surely come back into play by kids whose first CD was Bush Sixteen Stone, it just doesn't feel as "authentic" as it did back then. Times have changed kids, but the classic t-shirt, Levi's and All-Stars will never die. It just will never look as cool as it did on these dudes.

You could even be a fat dude in shorts and that was cool...even in Europe! (Fun fact, pretty sure Ira Kaplan has been swapping between the same two t-shirts since Yo La Tengo began in 1984.)

As Pavement demonstrate, your clothes did not have to "fit," let alone be "form fitting." Also note, white long sleeve tee. God I miss the '90s.

As for video fashion, Chavez may have put it all out on the table when they shot their video for "Break Up Your Band" on a trans-gender hosted talk show featuring suburban moms, stripping firemen, kimono clad rickshaw drivers, loin cloth covered dudes in bear masks, and a bevy of gigantic collars.

Something tells me Veruca Salt will opt against the floral crop tank top when they inevitably reunite. (Notice the gold microphones. Oh, Glastonbury.)